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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Treatment of hypertension plays a key role in primary prevention of cerebrovascular attacks. Meta-analysis of 17 prospective studies of the treatment of hypertension proved that reduction of the systolic and diastolic blood pressure by 8-10/5-6 mmHg leads to a reduction of fatal and non-fatal cerebrovascular attacks by 40%. In the nineties a Swedish and British investigation of systolic-diastolic hypertension in elderly subjects-
STOP
and MRC-provided evidence of the great impact of treatment of hypertension in primary prevention of cerebrovascular attacks also in elderly hypertensive subjects (60-80 years). It is important to treat also in advanced age frequent isolated systolic hypertension as this improves markedly the prognosis of these patients and reduces the incidence of cerebrovascular and coronary complications, as was proved by the American study SHEP. The authors demonstrate that so far only the minority of hypertensive patients is treated effectively in this country and data from abroad indicate also that treatment of hypertension is lacking in the premorbid stage in more than half the patients with a cerebrovascular attack. The drugs of choice in treatment of hypertension in the elderly are small doses of thiazide diuretics and cardioselective beta-blockers or beta-blockers with ISA. By increasing the number of treated hypertensive patients, incl. elderly patients with a hypertension, and by increasing the effectiveness of treatment it is possible to achieve a decline of the cerebrovascular mortality; our objective must be a decline of the cerebrovascular mortality by more than 50%, similarly as it happened already in the USA. Conversely the importance of treatment of hypertension in secondary prevention of cerebrovascular attacks is controversial. The authors emphasize also the importance of abstinence from smoking as well as careful treatment of
diabetes
and hyperlipidaemia. Antiaggregation treatment has a greater impact in secondary prevention than treatment of hypertension. As regards the latter it should suffice to reduce the blood pressure to values of cca 150-160/90 -100 mmHg and not to normal values.
...
PMID:[Treatment of hypertension in primary and secondary prevention of cerebrovascular stroke]. 892 16
Diuretics were used in most of the major trials that demonstrated that lowering the blood pressure reduced cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Nevertheless in the second half of the eighties, there were misgivings about the widespread use of thiazide diuretics, driven in part by the relative failure of the large trials to reduce myocardial infarction-to the extent predicted by large scale epidemiological studies. There was much attention on metabolic side effects of thiazide diuretics including dyslipidaemia, glucose intolerance, hypokalaemia, hyperuricaemia, and then microalbuminuria particularly in diabetic subjects. These issues were current when JNC (IV) (1988) and the WHO-ISH guidelines (1989) were being written. Three major clinical trials SHEP,
STOP
and MRC published in the early nineties established that thiazide diuretics alone, or in combination with beta blockers, did reduce cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in elderly subjects with hypertension. All guidelines published since 1993 include diuretics among the first line drugs. Possibly the most important factor in the restoration of diuretics has been the use of progressively lower doses that minimise the metabolic side effects. Diuretics are effective as monotherapy in the treatment of mild essential hypertension and of isolated systolic hypertension in elderly subjects. They are very useful in combination with beta blockers or with ACE inhibitors. They should be avoided in patients with gout and should not be used as first line drugs in patients with
diabetes
. They should only be used with caution in young obese subjects with dyslipidaemia and increased risk of coronary artery disease, facing many decades of treatment for hypertension. However there is no doubt that diuretics are effective, cheap and have a central role in the control of hypertension in all communities around the world.
...
PMID:[Role of diuretics in the treatment of hypertension: from large controlled trials to international guidelines]. 895 12
Type 2
diabetes
currently accounts for over 100 billion dollars in annual healthcare expenditure in the United States and 28% of the national (Medicare) healthcare budget for elderly Americans. In our inner-city hospital, 20% of all 950 beds are occupied by patients with
diabetes
; and 28-38% of patients receiving cardiac care in Coronary Care Units, catheterization laboratories or cardiovascular surgery, have
diabetes
as an underlying disorder. Both computer modelling and controlled clinical trials suggest that intensive therapy of
diabetes
can reduce significantly the morbidity and costs associated with this increasingly common disorder. Early detection of carbohydrate intolerance holds great promise for preventing the onset, progression and complications of Type 2
diabetes
. To date our efforts have been futile, with 20% of newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetic patients already complicated by retinopathy and 14% complicated by peripheral vascular disease. It is now clear that high-risk individuals can be identified, and intervention trials are underway to test the hypothesis that Type 2
diabetes
(and its attendant cardiovascular risks) can be prevented. The Study to Prevent Non-Insulin-Dependent Diabetes Mellitus (
STOP
NIDDM) in Canada and Europe has randomized 1200 individuals with impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) into a three-year trial to prevent disease progression. The
Diabetes
Prevention Program (DPP) in the US has randomized almost 3000 individuals with IGT into a six-year, three-arm study testing the efficacy of intensive lifestyle and pharmacological therapy in disease progression. Together, these studies should provide a public health model for the recognition of high-risk individuals and interventions to stem the epidemic of Type 2
diabetes
. For those patients suffering with Type 2
diabetes
already, pancreas transplantation remains an extreme intervention with the potential for 'curing'
diabetes
. Although applied usually to patients with Type 1
diabetes
, experience is accumulating of transplantation in Type 2 diabetic patients with end-stage renal disease. Outcomes for these individuals are as good as for Type 1
diabetes
. Islet-cell transplants, in fact, have been more successful in Type 2
diabetes
compared with Type 1. Improved islet-cell availability, better immunosuppression, and the possibility of antigen masking make this technology a major hope for the future.
...
PMID:Type 2 diabetes mellitus: the grand overview. 986 84
Calcium antagonists are widely used in the treatment of hypertension. However, few endpoint studies with calcium antagonists have been done to prove reduction in hypertensive complications. Results of the STONE, SYST-EUR and SYST-CHINA studies show that long-acting calcium antagonists are effective compared to placebo, especially in patients with isolated systolic hypertension and
diabetes
. Ongoing prospective and randomized trials like
STOP
II, INSIGHT, NORDIL, ALLHAT and ASCOT will clarify whether calcium antagonists are more effective than well-proven diuretics and betablockers. ASCOT will test the hypothesis that amlodipine is more efficacious than atenolol in preventing cardiac complications in 18,000 hypertensive patients with high coronary risk including
diabetes
(among them, 2,000 in Norway). The study is also randomizing the patients in a factorial design to either atorvastatin or placebo, testing the so-called lipid hypothesis.
...
PMID:[An overview of hypertension studies with calcium antagonists]. 1038 32
Hypertension has a high prevalence among elderly patients. Randomised trials have already demonstrated that treating healthy older persons with hypertension is highly efficacious. Nevertheless some questions have arisen. On the one hand the generalizability of these trial results, particularly for older persons with serious medical comorbidities and poor functional status, is not clear. On the other hand different antihypertensive drugs have shown to be effective. Which drug for which patient? Even data from randomised intervention trials showing that the treatment affects cardiovascular morbidity and mortality, were missing, ACE inhibitors have been used for more than a decade to treat high blood pressure. For a younger population the captopril prevention project showed no differences between ACE inhibitors and conventional antihypertensive treatment (diuretics, beta-blocker) concerning the primary endpoints (myocardial infarction, stroke and other cardiovascular death). The
STOP
-2 study also confirmed these results for elderly patients. When treating elderly patients one must be aware of physiological changes with age and the comorbidities. Of significance among this patient group is declining renal function. Admissions for uraemia that are related to the use of ACE inhibitors are still commonplace, although many cases are preventable by monitoring renal function, but guidelines are still missing. Concerning the comorbidities ACE inhibitors have benefits compared to other antihypertensive drugs, especially in cases of heart failure,
diabetes
and coronary heart disease.
...
PMID:The role of ACE inhibitors in the treatment of hypertensive elderly patients. 1120 Oct 13
The importance of type 2 diabetes is due to its high prevalence, the difficulties in achieving optimal glucose control (financial, time, quality of life) and the high frequency of chronic microvascular and macrovascular complications that add very significantly to the morbidity, mortality and overall cost of the disease. Numerous risk factors have been identified that predict the future onset of type 2 diabetes in individuals and an early stage of the disease (impaired glucose tolerance) can often be identified. Insulin resistance is central to the pathogenesis and is initially compensated by an increased insulin secretion. Over time, insulin secretion progressively fails and
diabetes
appears. Several approaches have been proposed for the prevention of
diabetes
. Lifestyle changes (nutritional therapy and physical activity) have been shown to reduce the frequency of
diabetes
in small studies and are being assessed in the NIH-funded
Diabetes
Prevention Trial. Metformin, which reduces insulin resistance and hyperinsulinaemia, is being assessed in this same trial. Acarbose, which has been shown to reduce post-prandial insulin secretion and improve insulin resistance, is being assessed in the
STOP
-NIDDM trial. The ACE inhibitor ramipril has been shown in the HOPE study to reduce the appearance of
diabetes
by one third when given to patients with vascular disorders and this class of agents has been shown to improve insulin resistance. Another very promising approach is the use of thiazolidinediones (rosiglitazone, pioglitazone) to improve the insulin resistance and possibly preserve the beta cells by reducing the need for increased insulin secretion. These lifestyle changes and medications have been shown to be safe in the treatment of type 2 diabetes. There is a high probability that one of these approaches will be effective in delaying or preventing type 2 diabetes, and prevention may become a clinical reality in the near future.
...
PMID:Prevention of type 2 diabetes. 1196 30
Recent trials have helped to clarify indications for the initial pharmacological therapy of hypertension. Both the Joint National Committee on Prevention, Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Pressure (JNC VI) and World Health Organization-international Society of Hypertension (WHO-ISH) recommendations should be revised. The more recent trials indicate that: (1) diuretics and beta-blockers appear to be as effective in reducing overall morbidity/ mortality as other agents (Swedish Trial in Old Patients with Hypertension [
STOP
-2], United Kingdom Prospective
Diabetes
Study [UKPDS], Intervention as a Goal in Hypertension Treatment [INSIGHT], Nordic diltiazem [NORDIL]); (2) the use of an a-blocker results in more cardiovascular events, especially congestive heart failure, when compared with a diuretic (Antihypertensive Therapy and Lipid Lowering Heart Attack Trial [ALLHAT]); (3)the use of an angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor results in fewer myocardial infarctions and episodes of heart failure than calcium channel blockers in the elderly and in diabetic patients (Fosinopril vs. Amlodipine Cardiovascular Events Randomized Trial [FACET], Appropriate Blood Pressure Control in
Diabetes
[ABCD],
STOP
-2) - other data (Captopril Prevention Project [CAPPP]) suggest that the use of an ACE inhibitor is preferred in diabetic patients; (4) overall cardiovascular events are similar with calcium channel blockers compared with a diuretic - however, there are fewer strokes with non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers (NORDIL) and a trend towards an increase in heart failure and myocardial infarctions with either a dihydropyridine or non-dihydropyridine calcium channel blockers compared with a diuretic (INSIGHT, NORDIL); (5) angiotensin receptor blockers (ARBs) will decrease proteinuria and slow progression of renal disease in type 2 diabetic patients when compared with regimens that do not include an ARB or an ACE inhibitor (Reduction of Endpoints in NIDDM with the Angiotensin II Antagonist Losartan [RENAAL], Irbesartan Type II Diabetic Nephropathy Trial [IDNT], Irbesartan Type II Diabetes with Microalbuminuria [IRMA Il]). The debate over initial therapy may be moot. High-risk hypertensive patients should probably be treated initially with combination therapy, one of which should be a diuretic. The use of diuretics and beta-blockers as well as ACE-inhibitors alone or with a diuretic should be considered as initial therapy (a change from JNCVI). Alpha-blockers should be reserved for special situations, i.e. prostatic hypertrophy (in contrast to WHO-ISH recommendations). An ACE-inhibitor or ARB, usually along with a diuretic, can be considered as preferred therapy in hypertensive diabetic patients. Some data suggest equal or greater reduction in strokes with a calcium channel blocker than other medications.
...
PMID:Current recommendations for the treatment of hypertension: are they still valid? 1199 97
In recent years postchallenge or postprandial hyperglycaemia has been found to be an independent risk factor for cardiovascular comorbidities and all-cause mortality in impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and type 2 diabetes. With the database of the Risk Factors in IGT for Atherosclerosis and
Diabetes
(RIAD) study, it was also shown that atherosclerosis as measured by intima-media thickness of the common carotid arteries was associated with 2-hour postchallenge glucose level when HbA1c was normal. Taken together there are now comprehensive and consistent data from pathophysiological as well as epidemiological studies that excessive post-load glucose excursions have acute and chronic harmful effects on the endothelium and vessel wall. This is supported by four outcome studies that included control of postprandial glucose to prevent cardiovascular disease:
Diabetes
Intervention Study (DIS), Kumamoto study, DIGAMI study, and
STOP
-NIDDM trial. Therefore, in addition to HbA1c and fasting blood glucose, postprandial glucose monitoring should be an integral part of treatment to prevent acute and chronic complications.
...
PMID:Postprandial hyperglycaemia: noxious effects on the vessel wall. 1216 6
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a major health problem associated with excess morbidity and mortality. As the prevalence of this metabolic disorder is rapidly increasing and current treatment fails to stabilise the disease in most patients, prevention should be considered as a key objective in the near future. People who develop type 2 diabetes pass through a phase of impaired glucose tolerance (IGT). Defects in the action and/or secretion of insulin are the two major abnormalities leading to development of glucose intolerance. Any intervention in the impaired glucose tolerance phase that reduces resistance to insulin or protects the beta-cells, or both, should prevent or delay progression to
diabetes
.Acarbose, miglitol and voglibose act by competitively inhibiting the alpha-glucosidases, a group of key intestinal enzymes involved in the digestion of carbohydrates. They decrease both postprandial hyperglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia, and thereby may improve sensitivity to insulin and release the stress on beta-cells. These compounds do not induce hypoglycaemia and have a good safety profile, although gastrointestinal adverse effects may limit long-term compliance to therapy. The recent placebo-controlled prospective
STOP
-noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(STOP-NIDDM) trial demonstrated that acarbose 100mg three times daily reduces the risk of developing type 2 diabetes in patients with IGT (relative risk reduction of 25% after a mean follow-up of 3.3 years). The 6-year Early
Diabetes
Intervention Trial (EDIT), comparing the effect of acarbose 50mg three times daily to that of metformin, showed a trend to a positive effect of acarbose compared with placebo, in a mid-term 3-year analysis, which should be confirmed in the final analysis. To our knowledge, no such prevention intervention trials have been or are currently being performed with miglitol or voglibose. In conclusion, because of its absence of toxicity and its particular mechanism of action on gastrointestinal tract and indirect consequences on both insulin action and beta-cell function, acarbose may be used to prevent type 2 diabetes. If the ongoing EDIT trial confirms the positive results of the recent
STOP
-NIDDM trial, acarbose could be used, either as an alternative or in addition to changes in lifestyle, to delay development of
diabetes
in patients with IGT. However, the best dosage of acarbose for this specific indication remains to be specified, especially when all three important parameters, efficacy, tolerance and cost, are taken into consideration.
...
PMID:Is there a role for alpha-glucosidase inhibitors in the prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus? 1269 98
Four prospective randomised long-term studies have been recently completed and published (
Diabetes
Prevention Study,
Diabetes
Prevention Program,
STOP
-NIDDM trial, XENDOS Study). Both of them clearly demonstrate the possibility to delay and/or prevent the onset of type 2 diabetes in at high-risk subjects with impaired glucose tolerance, through changes in lifestyle (dietary intervention, weight reduction, increased physical activity) or drug treatment (metformin, acarbose, orlistat). These studies are reviewed and practical implications of their results are discussed.
...
PMID:[Is it possible to prevent type 2 diabetes?]. 1291 58
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